14 Tex. 672 | Tex. | 1855
The questions, which it is material to consider, are, 1st. Whether the suit was barred by the Statute of Limitations. 2nd. Whether the defendant’s intestate was released from his liability upon the paper, by the laches of the
Upon the first question, there can be no difficulty. The mortgage, executed within four years next before the institution of the suit, contains an express acknowledgment of the justice of the debt; and there can be no question that it was sufficient to take the case out of the operation of the Statute of Limitations.
But it is insisted that, at the time of giving the mortgage, Cole was released from his liability as indorser, by the failure of the plaintiff to give him due and legal notice of the non-payment of the note, and consequently that the mortgage w;as without consideration, and void. It, however, does not so appear ; but on the contrary, the mortgage contains an express admission by the party, of his having received notice of the dishonor of the note. This must be taken to be, at least, prima facie evidence of the fact; (1 Greenl. Ev. Sec. 26, n.;) and it dispensed with the production of other proof of the admitted fact, upon the trial. Moreover, this was accommodation paper, indorsed for the accommodation of the maker and owner, and, it would seem, the indorser was not, by the Law Merchant, entitled to notice of the non-payment. In the case of Leckie v. Scott (10 La. 412, 5 new ed. 631,) it was held by the Supreme Court of Louisiana, that, where the maker and owner of a note, which he gets indorsed by the payee, transfers it to a third person, it becomes an accommodation paper, in which the indorser is merely a surety. (See Farmers’ Bank v. Varmeter, 4 Rand. R. 553.) The indorser of a note stands generally in the same relation to the maker, as the drawer of a bill does to the acceptor. And the same rule applies as in those cases, where notice is omitted to be/given to the drawer or indorser of a bill, under the like circumstances. (Story on Prom. Notes, Sec. 268-69-70; Chit. on Bills, 327-28, and notes.) But, if the indorser, in this case, was entitled to notice, it is very clear that the admission in the mortgage dispensed with the produc
The insolvency of the maker of the note was a sufficient excuse for not having first or simultaneously sued him. (Hart. Dig. Art. 670, 2525.)
The remaining question, as to the extent of the homestead exemption, from the influence of the mortgage, in this case, is not so clear for the plaintiffs. The legal effect of the mortgage was a question for the Court, and not for the jury to determine. There was no occasion to refer to the jury, the question of the extent of the operation of the homestead exemption, upon the property included in the mortgage. The question of fact for the jury was, whether the mortgage included the homestead. Their finding in effect affirms that fact; and in so far only, it is material. In so far as it finds the extent of the exemption, it is immaterial, and may be rejected; that being, manifestly, a question of law for the decision of the Court. It is material, therefore, to enquire whether the Court ruled rightly, in referring the extent of the homestead exemption, in its operation upon the mortgage, to the law in force at the date of the note, or of the mortgage; in other words, whether the mortgage was subject to the operation of the constitutional exemption in favor of the homestead. This will depend upon the question, whether we are to refer to the date of the note, or the mortgage, as the time when the debt was contracted; the one being prior, and the other subsequent to the 16th of February, 1846.
If the note, independently of the acknowledgment contained in the mortgage, had not been barred by the Statute at the time of commencing the suit, there could be no question, that its date must be taken to be the time when the debt was contracted. But in the case of Coles v. Kelsey, (2 Tex. R. 541,) it was held, that where a new promise or acknowledgment is
Reversed and re-formed.
The application for a re-hearing presents an important question of practice in relation to the taking of depositions. It is unneccessary, however, at present to determine that question, as we are of opinion that the deposition objected to, related to a matter wholly immaterial to the merits of the case. The mortgage was an original undertaking, as between the defendant and the plaintiffs. It not only, in itself, imported a consideration, but it also expressed one. And there was no necessity, as in the case of the mere acknowledgment of a pre